Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 83William Blackwood, 1858 - England |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 3
... course a limit to this continuance , inasmuch as vital activity is dependent on the destruction of tissue . The man who takes no food lives like a spendthrift on his capital , and cannot survive his capital . He is observed to get thin ...
... course a limit to this continuance , inasmuch as vital activity is dependent on the destruction of tissue . The man who takes no food lives like a spendthrift on his capital , and cannot survive his capital . He is observed to get thin ...
Page 25
... course early in the morning . Rugge himself set out to the race - course to kill two birds with one stone - catch Mr Losely - examine the blind man himself . He did catch Mr Losely , and very nearly caught something else - for that ...
... course early in the morning . Rugge himself set out to the race - course to kill two birds with one stone - catch Mr Losely - examine the blind man himself . He did catch Mr Losely , and very nearly caught something else - for that ...
Page 30
... course of the evening to make discreet inquiries in the neigh- bourhood . The result of the inquiries induced him to resolve upon prose- cuting the acquaintance thus begun . He contrived to learn the hours at which Mrs Haughton usually ...
... course of the evening to make discreet inquiries in the neigh- bourhood . The result of the inquiries induced him to resolve upon prose- cuting the acquaintance thus begun . He contrived to learn the hours at which Mrs Haughton usually ...
Page 31
... course he was ; but I was say- ing in the Hussars , together with the Guards , there were some very fine fellows very fine he was one of them . I could not resist paying my respects to the widowed lady of so fine a fellow . I know it is ...
... course he was ; but I was say- ing in the Hussars , together with the Guards , there were some very fine fellows very fine he was one of them . I could not resist paying my respects to the widowed lady of so fine a fellow . I know it is ...
Page 38
... course of those letters , he explains away the causes for sus- picion which Colonel Morley had so ungenerously suggested . He is no longer anonymous - he is J. Courte- nay Smith . He alludes incidentally to the precocious age in which ...
... course of those letters , he explains away the causes for sus- picion which Colonel Morley had so ungenerously suggested . He is no longer anonymous - he is J. Courte- nay Smith . He alludes incidentally to the precocious age in which ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
albumen animal Arab beauty Beranger better blood body Brahmins British CALIFORN called character Christian Church civilisation classes Colonel Morley course Crane Darrell death Delhi Dr Livingstone eyes face favour feel fibrine fire George Morley give Government guns hand Haughton head heart honour horse House of Vipont human India Jasper Losely jemadar John Kertch kind labour Lady Montfort Lahore land less Lionel live look Lord Lord Palmerston ment mind Minister Mombas native nature ness never night nitrogen officers once Pangany party passed perhaps person Peshawur Phillour poet present prison Punjab question race racter regiment round seems seen Sepoys Sikh Sophy substances tell thing Thorndale thought tion truth turn Umballa village Waife whole woman words young Zanzibar